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ZOAS. Stress – immune responsiveness - microbiota In calves. Problem . Widespread antibiotic overabundant use in farming. Use of antibiotics results in resistant microorganisms. Resistant microorganisms spread via food/environment to humans and eventually the clinic.
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ZOAS Stress – immune responsiveness - microbiota In calves
Problem • Widespread antibiotic overabundant use in farming. • Use of antibiotics results in resistant microorganisms. • Resistant microorganisms spread via food/environment to humans and eventually the clinic. • Antibiotic resistance hampers treatment of common infectous diseases. • Agriculture needs to find better practise to decrease need for antibiotics use. • Issue recognized worldwide and urgent for Dutch farmers.
Possible solution • No easy “one size fits all” solution. • Prevention is key. • Infections often arise from increased vulnerability of the animal and rapid exchange between animals.
ZOAS challenge • Can we strengthen the natural defenses of the animal to cope with stressful challenges of todays farming conditions. Deploy the self-organizing properties of the indigenous microbiome
Friends, neighbours, and enemies:Microbial co-occurrence and exclusion in the human microbiome Co- Anti- http://huttenhower.sph.harvard.edu/
ZOAS case: Shipping fever in calves Shipping fever: symptoms of dripping noses, fever, diarrhoea occurring in calves just after transport and arrival at breeder. 90 – 95% of all calves receive antibiotics due to shipping fever
Shipping fever – stressing challenges Premature immunity Rapidly changing environment: New pathogenic challenges Premature microbiome Pathobionts Anxiety: Fear / Exhaustion
New-born gains immunity from the mother in the first weeks • Reflect local environmental pathogens. • Provides immunity during development calf own immune system. Calf owns antibodies
Shipping fever – stressing challenges Premature immunity Rapidly changing environment: New pathogenic challenges Premature microbiome Pathobionts Anxiety: Fear / Exhaustion
Shipping fever – current solution Antibiotics
Shipping fever – ZOAS solution Premature immunity Rapidly changing environment: New pathogenic challenges Premature microbiome Pathobionts Anxiety: Fear / Exhaustion
Microbial environment at farmer Immune responsiveness compromised Microbial Environment at breeder pathogenic (over)growth balance balance Healthy immature immune responsiveness Healthy mature immune responsiveness
Solutions for Shipping fever in calves “Simple” solution: do not ship, leave calf with mother and in its environment until immunity / microbiome has developed and eat less meat. Or – Strengthen the natural defenses of the animal to cope with stressful challenges of todays farming conditions.
SOAS: microbiota–immune responsivenessstay in balance Identify prime network factors that cause / prevent dys-balance • Relation of illness symptoms (calf) to stress/anxiety (calf) and pathogenic load (environment) • Read out: • Microbiota (metagenomics) • Immune, Stress and Neurochemical markers Possibility prevention dys-balance • Multivariate machine learning to determine biomarkers for balance microbiota – immune responsiveness calf • Predict which factors can be changed (e.g. transport, housing or feeding schemes) dys-balance of immune responsiveness –microbiota?
Balancing the project workpackage cost Cost acquiring data Cost model development Link to existing projects and use available data as much as possible
Alliances • SKV and SDA:infocalf - data on calf drug therapies. • PPS (Van Drie / Friesland Campina / UMCU / TNO) Sharing data on respiratory tract and gut microbiota and origin calf • Environmental microbial factors - SKV?
Deliverables • Model and appropriate biomarkers on (factors influencing) the self organizing and autonomous system ‘microbiota – Immune responsiveness’. • Link anxiety to microbiome structure. • Identification of most relevant environmental factors that affect microbiome. • Industrially relevant strategy to keep microbiome system in balance.
Industrial relevance • Need to reduce use of antibiotics in veal industry in the Netherlands and elsewhere. • Economic benefit can be gained from eliminating antibiotics. • Opportunities for feed producing companies. • Approach for calf shipping fever is generic and can be adopted for use in pork and chicken farming.